An interesting, and at the same time very intense series. Violet (or Violet, as you like) did the right thing when she didn't kill those soldiers. She gave her word to Major Gilbert that she would never be a weapon again. She has a completely different purpose now - to help people. A very intriguing cliffhanger at the end of the episode, I rather want to know how this scene with the capture of the train will end.
is this the end? in the most interesting place.. and I thought I would roar the whole series, but here I'm mixing this with soldiers, I'm just in shock
and why did he blame her for everything? she always wanted to save the major!
Two brothers with the same eye color, but a different look. Two brothers with absolutely different attitudes to the "if you're not a tool, then what is?", she's a person! Man, do you hear. With a beautiful soul who is just beginning to learn the charm and pain of all emotions "I wanted to protect him" / left to cry once again/
The series is straight heavy, tense. Probably many people cursed Dietfried in this series for his attitude towards Violet, but I can't hate him. He loved his brother, yes, the act with a gift in the form of a battle doll is a kick, but that's not about it right now, we already realized that they are with their brother, like north and south. He loved his brother, and still grieves for him. He blames Violet for his death (after all, in his eyes she is a fighting doll who MUST protect her master even at the cost of her life). and it was easy for him to blame Violet, because he saw in her only a tool, and did not want to admit that she was still a person, not a robot. And when he saw her on the train, he realized it in his heart, but he did not want to admit that even she was unable to save Gilbert. He was looking for an excuse to continue blaming her for his death, but he saw perfectly well that she had changed, that she was not an instrument, that she was a living person.
I can't blame him for loving his brother and grieving for him. We are all different and experience the same thing in different ways.
I thought those were over.
A very intriguing cliffhanger at the end of the episode, I rather want to know how this scene with the capture of the train will end.
and I thought I would roar the whole series, but here I'm mixing this with soldiers, I'm just in shock
and why did he blame her for everything? she always wanted to save the major!
cranberries are good, spread out)
"if you're not a tool, then what is?", she's a person! Man, do you hear. With a beautiful soul who is just beginning to learn the charm and pain of all emotions
"I wanted to protect him" / left to cry once again/
Probably many people cursed Dietfried in this series for his attitude towards Violet, but I can't hate him.
He loved his brother, yes, the act with a gift in the form of a battle doll is a kick, but that's not about it right now, we already realized that they are with their brother, like north and south.
He loved his brother, and still grieves for him. He blames Violet for his death (after all, in his eyes she is a fighting doll who MUST protect her master even at the cost of her life). and it was easy for him to blame Violet, because he saw in her only a tool, and did not want to admit that she was still a person, not a robot. And when he saw her on the train, he realized it in his heart, but he did not want to admit that even she was unable to save Gilbert. He was looking for an excuse to continue blaming her for his death, but he saw perfectly well that she had changed, that she was not an instrument, that she was a living person.
I can't blame him for loving his brother and grieving for him. We are all different and experience the same thing in different ways.